Anonymous wrote:Wow. This change is already in effect. At our back to school night on Tuesday (Shepherd) informed us that two members of the support staff are currently being trained on how to handle and dispense medicines. The principal did not say that the (already part-time) nurse was being cut back, but with this thread, it is easy to see the writing on the wall.
Anonymous wrote:Basis has never had a nurse to my knowledge.
Anonymous wrote:Wow. This change is already in effect. At our back to school night on Tuesday (Shepherd) informed us that two members of the support staff are currently being trained on how to handle and dispense medicines. The principal did not say that the (already part-time) nurse was being cut back, but with this thread, it is easy to see the writing on the wall.
Anonymous wrote:The relevant committee, I think, is Health and Human Services.
http://dccouncil.us/committees/committe-on-health-and-human-services
Yvette Alexander is the chair so she doesn't have a lot of incentive to do much (nor does Ruby LaMay). But Grosso, Cheh, and Nadeau do.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So 1/2 time per school without regard to the size of the school? 1/2 time for 300 students and 1/2 time for 1300 also?
It is a terrible idea either way, but a much worse idea for really big schools.
1/2 time minimum. The actuals will depend on number of students, student health needs, and proximity to health services in the community.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nurses are nice to have in ES - essential in middle and high school.
Essential in ES too - head injuries, asthma, broken bones on playground equipment, allergies and little kids in lunch rooms, etc. etc.,
Anonymous wrote:Nurses are nice to have in ES - essential in middle and high school.
Anonymous wrote:I can see better coordination of care with pediatricians and community resources being helpful for complicated cases or kids with no access to resources. But I don't see how it helps at all with stuff that comes up during the school day -- medications, injuries, illnesses ... The nurse at our school stored and dispensed medications. Who will do that when she's gone? She sat with our son when he had a seizure until we got there. Would he have to just lay down in a corner of the classroom? I overheard her calling down to the cafeteria telling them to make breakfast for a girl who arrived late with a "stomach ache" (e.g., was going hungry). Who would do that?